circs
English
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /sɝks/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /sɜːks/
- Rhymes: -ɜː(ɹ)ks
Noun
circs pl (plural only)
- (plural only, informal) Circumstances.
- 2009 May 21, Christopher Breen, “Subscriptions, Sonos, and the Second Coming”, in Macworld:
- I'm covered as far as iPod and automobile go as I have a solid library of music I've ripped from CD and purchased. But music throughout the house is trickier. And, under normal circs, subscription is no answer.
- 2010 December 16, Julie Burchill, “Spare us these pampered protesters who riot in defence of their privilege”, in The Independent:
- Charlie Gilmour's father is an old Etonian poet; his stepfather a superannuated rock star worth around £78m whose most famous ditty insisted, somewhat amusingly under the circs, that "We don't need no education."
- 2011 May 1, Joanna Trollope, “Royal wedding: is this a fairytale? No, it is the real thing”, in The Telegraph:
- All this royal pomp and circs and magnificence and significance and sacred music and you are, quite rightly, your unaffected modern English selves.
- 2011 June 14, Jennifer Peltz, “Defense: Fatal NYC tower fire a 'bad circumstance'”, in BusinessWeek:
- "They were trapped in circs that they didn't know anything about, that they could not have foreseen […]
Catalan
Occitan
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